Fact Check

US Army swore in tech executives as lieutenant colonels

The Silicon Valley executives will serve as senior advisers as part of the U.S. Army Reserve, according to a news release.

by Rae Deng, Published June 17, 2025


Four men in camouflage uniforms stand with their palms raised to swear an oath in front of one man in a military officer uniform who also has his palm raised.

U.S. Army Chief of Staff Gen. Randy A. George swears in four tech executives as lieutenant colonels, June 13, 2025.


Claim:
The U.S. Army swore in four senior executives with ties to technology companies Meta, Palantir and OpenAI as lieutenant colonels in 2025.
Rating:
True

About this rating


In mid-June 2025, a claim spread online that the U.S. Army swore in tech executives as lieutenant colonels. 

The rumor spread on Facebook, X and Reddit. Many claims specified that the Army swore in four Silicon Valley executives with ties to Meta, which owns social media platforms like Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp; Palantir, a data analysis software company; and OpenAI, which developed the generative artificial intelligence chatbot ChatGPT

In a June 13, 2025, news release, the Army announced the swearing-in of four tech executives as lieutenant colonels, a rank that typically takes nearly two decades to achieve. The executives will serve part-time in the Army Reserve as senior advisers. As of this writing, all of the executives either currently hold or once held senior positions at Meta, Palantir or OpenAI. Thus, we rate this claim true. 

Per the news release, these executives will serve in a new initiative called "Detachment 201: The Army's Executive Innovation Corps," which is "designed to fuse cutting-edge tech expertise with military innovation." 

Read the relevant portion of the news release below (emphasis ours): 

On June 13, 2025, the Army will officially swear in four tech leaders.

Det. 201 is an effort to recruit senior tech executives to serve part-time in the Army Reserve as senior advisors. In this role they will work on targeted projects to help guide rapid and scalable tech solutions to complex problems. By bringing private-sector know-how into uniform, Det. 201 is supercharging efforts like the Army Transformation Initiative, which aims to make the force leaner, smarter, and more lethal.

The four new Army Reserve Lt. Cols. are Shyam Sankar, Chief Technology Officer for Palantir; Andrew Bosworth, Chief Technology Officer of Meta; Kevin Weil, Chief Product Officer of OpenAI; and Bob McGrew, advisor at Thinking Machines Lab and former Chief Research Officer for OpenAI.

Thinking Machines Lab is an artificial intelligence research and product company. 

Sankar, Bosworth, Weil and McGrew also published their own statements on X announcing their swearings-in; Bosworth said in his statement that the four advisers' "primary role will be to serve as technical experts advising the Army's modernization efforts." 

 The Wall Street Journal reported (archived) that the "tech reservists will serve for around 120 days a year." 

Snopes has previously examined many claims about Meta, Palantir and OpenAI, including an allegation that Meta forced Facebook users to follow U.S. President Donald Trump and Vice President JD Vance, a rumor that Palantir is creating a national database of U.S. citizens and a claim that an OpenAI artificial intelligence model lied to avoid being shut down. 


By Rae Deng

Grace "Rae" Deng specializes in government/politics and is based in Tacoma, Wash.


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